Thus, it was not surprising that two former chairmen of the Senate Armed Services Committee, one a Democrat and one a Republican, Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) and John Warner (R-Va.), introduced Hagel at the witness table at the hearing. Despite his distinguished service to the country, several Republican members of the Senate Armed Services Committee not only used the hearing to disparage Hagel personally, by distorting his record and taking many of his statements on national security issues out of context, but they attempted to filibuster the nomination.

During the hearing, his detractors essentially accused him of being anti-Israel because he did not believe that the United States should give unconditional support to every policy pursued by the government of Israel. They accused him of being pro-Iran because he supported negotiations with the internationally recognized government of Iran rather than overthrowing the regime with force. Hagel believed, as did President Ronald Reagan and former Secretaries of State George Shultz and Henry Kissinger, that the world should work toward the eventual elimination of nuclear weapons.

The Senate Republican critics of Hagel, only four of whom voted to confirm him, compounded the problem by not discussing the real challenges that he would face when he assumed the mantle of Pentagon leadership. For example, they neglected to bring up the impact of the Budget Control Act on the defense budget, the new defense strategy of rebalancing to Asia, or setting a deadline for the withdrawal of our troops from Afghanistan.

When questioning Pompeo, senators should applaud him for his service to the country and focus on his positions on four major challenges that are currently facing the Trump administration and the country. Those are North Korea’s nuclear program and the upcoming summit with President Kim Jong Un, the Iran nuclear deal which the president must certify or decertify by May, the threat posed by Russia to our allies and our way of life, and the role of the United States in the continuing wars in the Middle East. Rather than distorting or taking his record out of context, the senators should ask Pompeo whether he still stands by the positions he has publicly taken on these issues.

That is, whether the nuclear deal, brokered by the Obama administration and the four other permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany, is an unconscionable arrangement that increases the risk to all Americans and that the Iranian regime is intent on destroying this country, whether he still supports regime change in North Korea or that the United States should not offer a single concession in the upcoming negotiations, whether he believes, as his CIA colleagues concluded, that the Russians meddled in our 2016 presidential election, that Iran is complying with the nuclear deal, and whether the United States should remain in Syria indefinitely and continue aiding the Saudis in Yemen.

Given the fact that President Trump has replaced H.R. McMaster with John Bolton as White House national security adviser, it is important that the next secretary of State not have views on these issues as extreme as Bolton. If Pompeo has not changed his mind on these issues, he should not be confirmed because the administration and the nation need a counterweight to Trump and Bolton. This is something on which both Republicans and Democrats should be able to agree.